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Whiskers Announced For Homecoming
Tuesday, September 22, 1936
C h e f O T i t t e
P ublished by A ssociated S tu d en ts
ARIZONA STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE FLAGSTAFF. ARIZONA
Grow A Beard
For
Homecoming
Volume XXIV--No. 1
Frosh Registration Shows Increase
Chain Gang To
Lead Rally For
Cal-Poly Game
New Method Will Be Tried
In Marching Formation
Of Students
Girls To Assist
Procession Will Be Headed
By Pep Squad Group
30 Strong
With the thought of victory over
Cal. Poly next Saturday upper­most
in mind, the Chain Gang, un­der
the. leadership of Andy Wolf,
has released plans for a pre-game
rally to be held Friday night.
The former method of holding
pep rallies was to meet in front of
the main building, and to serpen­tine
to the business section of town.
This year, however, the student
body will assemble in front of the
old dining hall, going to town In
a body, and forming serpentines
upon approaching the Santa Fe
depot. The change is due to com-
*■'plaints made by upper classmen,
saying that they were all tired out
by the time they reached town in
a serentine.
Marching at the head of the pep
rallies this year will be the girls’
pep squad, composed of 10 girls
from each of the three upper clas­ses.
Freshmen girls were not
elected into the pep squad this year
because of the new ruling made
by the Student Council, stating
that a separate pep squad was to
be formed by the members of the
freshman class. All freshmen are
required to p a r t i c i p a t e in their pep
squad, making it compulsory for
them to attend all pep rallies and
athletic functions.
The pep rally Friday night will
meet at 7:30 m front of the dining
hall, at which time they will be
placed under the guidance of Sam
Illitzky, yell leader, and his newly
appointed assistant, A1 Cook of
Kingman. In the downtown dis­trict,
Illitzky and Cook will lead
the students in school songs and
yells.
“The Chain Gang is busy col­lecting
instruments, cans, drums,
and everything else that will make
lots of noise, because we intend to
make this the best rally ever
staged,” Andy Wolf, Chain Gang
president, said when interviewed
by a Pine representative. “We hope
that the students will help us out
and try to have thir own noise-making
utensils with them," he
also stated. Yell leader S&m Illit­zky,
when interviewed, said, “My
assistant and I will do our best to
have bigger and better pep rallies.
Wte are contemplating several
methods of adding entertainment
to the future rallies.”
MOVIES TO BE
PRESENTED IN
ASHURST AUD.
“The Thirteenth Guest” Will
Be Shown As First
Of Series
Tomorrow night in Ashurst audi­torium
at 7:15 p. m. the curtain
will rise on the first of a series
of talking pictures in both educa^
tional and entertaining lines. The
picture selected for tomorrow night
will be “The Thirteenth Guest,”
and on Thursday, September 24,
the picture “Grass” will be shown.
The film “The Thirteenth Guest”
is more of the conventional type,
being based upon Armitage Trail’s
thrilling mystery novel of the same
name. Featured in the picture are
Ginger Rogers, Lyle Talbot, and
J. Farrell McDonald. Mr. McDon­ald
is the father-in-law of Gar­rett
Arbelbide, new football mentor
of the collegc.
The picture “Grass" is the actual
picturization of the semi-annual
migration of the Baktyari tribe in
Persia, showing the unbelievable
hardships of the Baktyari in their
combat with nature to obtain grass
for their flocks. Only three white
people have ever been recorded as
having seen the actual depiction
of-_elemental life and mighty cour­age
of the Baktyari tribe.
The pictures are made possible
through use of a sound projector
which was recently- purchased by
the college.** The projector will be
primarily used for educational pic­tures,
but will occasionally be used
to bring pictures to the college stu­dents,
which they would not other­wise
be able to see. The college
plans to bring many pictures to
the students which were filmed by
French, English, German and Rus-sion
film companies.
J a m e 8 W illiam s
Sees China W hile
On Sum m er Tour
Jimpie'
lege drum major, Howard Cannon,
former A. S. T. C. student and at
present orchestra leader at the U.
of A., and Corwin Larson, A. S.
T. C. alumnus, were among a group
touring the Far East as members
of the orchestra on the ship S. S.
Jefferson.
Returning on July 30, after a
prolonged seven weeks spent on
board ship and on foreign shores,
the orchestra members saw much
of China and the Philippines. They
saw much of China, as their boat
was dry-docked a week in Hon—
kong.
IMPORTANT, FROSH
All freshmen must attend a spec­ial
meeting to be held tonight at
7:30 at Ashurst auditorium. Roll
call will be taken, and freshmen
not present will be dealt with ac­cordingly.
T otal E n rollm en t Is
N ear 4 0 0 Mark A s
F a ll T e r m B egin s
Pictured above are Johnny Ricca, president of the Associated Stu­dents.
and Amy Thompson, president of Associated Women Students,
who will lead campus activities this fall. Both Ricca and Thompson
have started on programs which should assure the college a busy year.
New Attendance
Rules In Effect
Here This Quarter
No Excuse For Illness Of Less
Than Two Days Will
Be Allowed
New rules in attendance for stu­dents
and faculty will be enforced
here this fall, it was learned here
at registration last week.
The most important change, at
least from the student point of
view, is that no excuses for illness
will be allowed for less than two
days. If a student wishes to be
sick for one day, it will be on his
own responsibility, whereas, for­merly
an excuse was allowed for
one day.
A new ruling provides that a
student’s absence from classes for
more than five consecutive days
must be reported to the registrar's
office. The optional giving of
“double cuts" before and after va­cation
periods is a change in the
opposite direction. The previous
practice was for such cuts to be
automatically imposed for ab­sences
immediately before or after
vacations.
Faculty members are restricted
by the vacation ruling, also. They
are expected to atteqd classes im­mediately
before and after vaca­tions,
as well as students. In­structors
are required to report to
the administration if they wish to
be absent from any classes for any
reason, and are expected to provide
for class work during such ab­sences.
Teachers are also required
to call roll at each class, follow
class schedules, and may not give
examinations * at other than the
scheduled periods.
C arlotta W oodburn
M akes B est M ark
In E nglish Exam
Three of the five highest grades
in the English examination given
to all freshmen and transfers last
week were made by students c<
ing from high schools employing
Flagstaff graduates as English
teachers, it was revealed by Dr.
Mary A. Hill, head of the English
department here. The highest
mark was 227, made by Carlotta
Woodburn, Flagstaff. The maxi­mum
was 270. The others were
Margaret Temme, Jerome, 226;
Pauline Sandholt, Monterey, Calif-,
215; Callie Hoovler, Flagstaff, 208,
and Laurel Peterson, Flagstaff,
203. The number of students tak­ing
the test exceeded previous
^ears, and the median was the
iighest since 1931, Dr. Hill said.
The rise i n t h e median was at­tributed
by DrT'Hill to better Eng­lish
teaching in high schools, al­though
“the proof lies in the fur
ture, she said.
B jerg P roves H andy
Man D uring O uting
W ith P air Of P an ts
H. 0. Bjerg of the Arizona State
Teachers college industrial arts de­partment
demonstrated his re­sourcefulness
when his automobile
became stuck in the sand in a re­mote
section of the Navajo reser­vation.
Bjerg said there was not a sign
of brush to place under the car’s
wheels to gam traction.
So, he related, he doffed his
trousers, placed them under a rear
wheel and extricated the car.—Hol­brook
Tribune.
Bushy Growth To Decide Homecoming King
At a regular meeting of the Stu­dent
Council last night in the Stu­dent
Council office, the student
representatives voted unanimously
to support a whiskerino to be
started immediately until Home­coming,
October 24.
All students, faculty members,
Townjacks, and citizens of Flag­staff
are urged to stop shaving un­til
after the game with Tempe on
Skidmore field, on Hanley day.
Campaigns will be started immedi­ately
to enforce the ruling, and to
win the Flagstaff residents over to
the idea. That something of this
type can be done is proved every
year at the Indian Pow Wow. All
people of the immediate vicinity
seem pleased to have an opportun­ity
to “play Injun,” and it is hoped
that everyone will appreciate the
opportunity to play Lumberjack.
Sam Illitzky, college yell leader,
was appointed by the Student
Council to take charge of the whis­kerino,
and he will start a -pub­licity
program in the very near fu­ture.
Sam will appoint several
assistants to work with him in
iromoting the fete to help in mak-ng
Hanley day the greatest of all
Homecomings. “If things work
out as well as they seem on the
surface," said Illitzky, “we will of­fer
a large variety of prizes—one
for the best beard, one for the
worst beard, and several for those
in between.”
Sid Knudsen, editor of the Pine,
announced that a committee of
downtown barbers would select the
King of Homecoming from all the
contestants. The barbers will be
asked to show no favoritism, but
to select the winner fromN*'among I An appropriation of $45
those men with the longest, the made by the Student Council with
iggest and the toughest whiskers,
fhen interviewed by one of his re­porters,
Knudsen said, “We want
to make this the biggest and the
best whiskerino ever held in Flag-staff,
and from what they tell me,
they used to have some mighty
good ones here in the old days.”
The Pine has always selected the
Homecoming King and Queen in
the past, and will have charge of
doing so this year.
The Student Council, realizing
that student teachers and a few
other male student* on the cam­pus
would find themselves in a
position where they could not go
without 8having, proclaimed that
a few exceptions will be granted.
The legal exceptions will be listed,
in next week's Pine.
which sweaters are to be purchased
for the Pep squad. Bnx Moore,
student body secretary, and mem­ber
of the Pep squad suggested
that the uniform of the Pep squad
be slacks and sweaters, and the
council agreed to pay for one-half
of the total expenditures on the
Pep squad uniforms, not to exceed
the $45 allotted. Sweaters were
also *>ted for the yell leader and
assistant yell leader.
Heated arguments were heard
when th‘ e Student Council discussed
plans for an annual, the La Cuesta.
which, it is hoped will be printed
thia year. However, the discus­sions
were shelved until the next
Student Council meeting, at which
new material will be presented for
discussion.
ADD FOUR NEW
M EM B E R S TO
FACULTY LIST
C a l d w e l l Johnson Replaces
Alfred Anderson Who
Is On Leave
' With the opening of school last
week, four new faculty membere
made their appearance at the col­lege
here. Arden B. Olsen is new
head of the business education de­partment,
replacing D. B. Harmon;
Caldwell Johnson replaces Alfred
Anderson who is now on leave of
labsunce from the music depart­ment;
Garret Arbelbide is new
football coach, replacing Mark
Macintosh, and James G. Johnson
‘ is new publicity director and in­structor
in English and journalism,
i Dr. Olsen received his B.S. and
M.S. degrees from the University
of Utah, and his Ph.D. from the
University of California. He has
taught at several colleges inelud
ing Utah State Agricultural col­lege
and the University of Cali­fornia.
Caldwell Johnson received
his B.A. degree from Iowa Univer­sity
and his M.A. from Columbia.
Arbelbide was graduated from
the University of Southern Califor­nia
where he played football under
Howard Jones. He has both the
B.A. and M.A. degrees from there
He has coached at Modesto and La
Verne colleges in California. James
Johnson received his B.A. at the
University of Minnesota with fur­ther
work at Amherst college, Uni­versity
of Geneva and Kansas
State college. He has taught at
Park college, Kansas State college,
Texas A. and M. college, and comes
to Flagstaff from the college of
Emporia, Kans.
Pi K a p p a E psilon
To Honor V isitin g
C a l i f . G rid Team
Honoring the visiting Polytech­nic
college football team of San
Louis Obispo, Pi Kappa Epsilon,
local De Molay fraternity, will hold
their annual football dance in As­hurst
auditorium next Saturday
night-
"We have planned to have the
auditorium decorated, refreshments
served, and a well filled program
and good music,” Harry Biller
president of the organization, tola
the Pine this week. As has been
the custom of the organisation in
the past, the members of the club
will hold interpolation, at which
time the Pi Kappa ritual for the
event will be gone through.
Committees for the supervision
of the dance are: Decorations, Tom
Tucker, Sid Knudsen, Paul Her­rera;
refreshments, John Herrera;
music, James Williams. Interpola­tion
will be given by John Herrera
and Tom Tucker.
Smallest S e n i o r Year Class
In Years Seen With
37 Sighed
Men Dominate
F i n a l Count Reveals Males
Outnumber Females By
Good Margin
With only a few stragglers left
to report registration had swelled
from 368 last Thursday to nearly
400 students, records from the reg­istrar’s
office revealed today. Ap­proximately
170 freshmen, one of
the largest classes in recent years,
brings the enrollment up close to
the figure set last year. \
Contrary to the general rule in
teachers colleges, men students
outnumber the women by 16 per
cent, as records show that 37 more
males havesigned up than females.
It is thoughf'that Flagstaff is one
of the few teachers cbl leges in the
oeuntry which can hoaat such a
record.
This year out-of-state registra­tion
is up 17 per cent over last year
with 65 students giving out-of-state
addresses. Of this number,
California takes the lead with 20,
Illinois is second with 12, Texas
third with 6. New York, Indiana
and New Mexico claim four each;
Kansas and Missouri, three for
each state; Utah *uid Michigan
claim two, while Oklahoma, Wis­consin,
Georgia, Iowa, Colorado
and Louisiana have registered one
from each state.
In Arizona, Coconino county
leads all others by a large margin,
placing 61 students from seven
towns. Gila county placed second
with 38. The enrollment from the
other counties was: Maricopa, S3;
Cochise, 32; Navajo, 31; Yavapai,
31; Apache, 23; Yuma, 14; Pinal,
11; Mojave, 10; Greenlee, 10; Gra­ham,
7, and Pima, 3.
In the upper class division two
of the smallest classes in recent
N ew C ollege Inn To
Open H om ecom ing
A new College Inn twice as large
as the old one with a large fireplace
and ample room for dancing will
be finished in time for Homecom-
“Pat” Patterson, proprietor,
_ the Pine this morning.
The same policy of service to the
students as has been used in the
past will be carried on, Pat also
stated. The reason for the new
Inn is that the old one is getting
too small for the college.
ing, 1
tola tl
years are evidenced with only ap­proximately
37 seniors and 66 jun­iors
signed up. The apparent rea­son
for the small number of seniors
registered is that a large group
graduated at the end of summer
school to escape from the new
teacher requirements going into ef­fect
this falL
The reason for the junior mor­tality
is probably because with the
return of bettet'Times many of the
students have returned to work.
Sophomore registration, however,
totaled 104, a very slight drop from
last year’s freshman class.
U. S. Senator C arl
H ayden To S p e a k
A t C o u r t H o u s e
United States Senator Carl Hay­den
will speak at the county court­house
tomorrow night at 8 p. m.
under the auspices of the Young
Democratic club of Arizona, Pat
Patterson, local president of the
club which has charge of the meet­ing,
told the Pine last week.
The theme of his address will be
the Roosevelt program and the
New Deal. He will explain many
of the features and will answer all
questions regarding the adminis­tration’s
work.
Carl Hayden is serving as sena-
_jr from Arizona in his second
term; he doe* not com* up for re-election
for another four years.
Prior to this time he acted at rep­resentative
for a number of years.

Whiskers Announced For Homecoming
Tuesday, September 22, 1936
C h e f O T i t t e
P ublished by A ssociated S tu d en ts
ARIZONA STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE FLAGSTAFF. ARIZONA
Grow A Beard
For
Homecoming
Volume XXIV--No. 1
Frosh Registration Shows Increase
Chain Gang To
Lead Rally For
Cal-Poly Game
New Method Will Be Tried
In Marching Formation
Of Students
Girls To Assist
Procession Will Be Headed
By Pep Squad Group
30 Strong
With the thought of victory over
Cal. Poly next Saturday upper­most
in mind, the Chain Gang, un­der
the. leadership of Andy Wolf,
has released plans for a pre-game
rally to be held Friday night.
The former method of holding
pep rallies was to meet in front of
the main building, and to serpen­tine
to the business section of town.
This year, however, the student
body will assemble in front of the
old dining hall, going to town In
a body, and forming serpentines
upon approaching the Santa Fe
depot. The change is due to com-
*■'plaints made by upper classmen,
saying that they were all tired out
by the time they reached town in
a serentine.
Marching at the head of the pep
rallies this year will be the girls’
pep squad, composed of 10 girls
from each of the three upper clas­ses.
Freshmen girls were not
elected into the pep squad this year
because of the new ruling made
by the Student Council, stating
that a separate pep squad was to
be formed by the members of the
freshman class. All freshmen are
required to p a r t i c i p a t e in their pep
squad, making it compulsory for
them to attend all pep rallies and
athletic functions.
The pep rally Friday night will
meet at 7:30 m front of the dining
hall, at which time they will be
placed under the guidance of Sam
Illitzky, yell leader, and his newly
appointed assistant, A1 Cook of
Kingman. In the downtown dis­trict,
Illitzky and Cook will lead
the students in school songs and
yells.
“The Chain Gang is busy col­lecting
instruments, cans, drums,
and everything else that will make
lots of noise, because we intend to
make this the best rally ever
staged,” Andy Wolf, Chain Gang
president, said when interviewed
by a Pine representative. “We hope
that the students will help us out
and try to have thir own noise-making
utensils with them," he
also stated. Yell leader S&m Illit­zky,
when interviewed, said, “My
assistant and I will do our best to
have bigger and better pep rallies.
Wte are contemplating several
methods of adding entertainment
to the future rallies.”
MOVIES TO BE
PRESENTED IN
ASHURST AUD.
“The Thirteenth Guest” Will
Be Shown As First
Of Series
Tomorrow night in Ashurst audi­torium
at 7:15 p. m. the curtain
will rise on the first of a series
of talking pictures in both educa^
tional and entertaining lines. The
picture selected for tomorrow night
will be “The Thirteenth Guest,”
and on Thursday, September 24,
the picture “Grass” will be shown.
The film “The Thirteenth Guest”
is more of the conventional type,
being based upon Armitage Trail’s
thrilling mystery novel of the same
name. Featured in the picture are
Ginger Rogers, Lyle Talbot, and
J. Farrell McDonald. Mr. McDon­ald
is the father-in-law of Gar­rett
Arbelbide, new football mentor
of the collegc.
The picture “Grass" is the actual
picturization of the semi-annual
migration of the Baktyari tribe in
Persia, showing the unbelievable
hardships of the Baktyari in their
combat with nature to obtain grass
for their flocks. Only three white
people have ever been recorded as
having seen the actual depiction
of-_elemental life and mighty cour­age
of the Baktyari tribe.
The pictures are made possible
through use of a sound projector
which was recently- purchased by
the college.** The projector will be
primarily used for educational pic­tures,
but will occasionally be used
to bring pictures to the college stu­dents,
which they would not other­wise
be able to see. The college
plans to bring many pictures to
the students which were filmed by
French, English, German and Rus-sion
film companies.
J a m e 8 W illiam s
Sees China W hile
On Sum m er Tour
Jimpie'
lege drum major, Howard Cannon,
former A. S. T. C. student and at
present orchestra leader at the U.
of A., and Corwin Larson, A. S.
T. C. alumnus, were among a group
touring the Far East as members
of the orchestra on the ship S. S.
Jefferson.
Returning on July 30, after a
prolonged seven weeks spent on
board ship and on foreign shores,
the orchestra members saw much
of China and the Philippines. They
saw much of China, as their boat
was dry-docked a week in Hon—
kong.
IMPORTANT, FROSH
All freshmen must attend a spec­ial
meeting to be held tonight at
7:30 at Ashurst auditorium. Roll
call will be taken, and freshmen
not present will be dealt with ac­cordingly.
T otal E n rollm en t Is
N ear 4 0 0 Mark A s
F a ll T e r m B egin s
Pictured above are Johnny Ricca, president of the Associated Stu­dents.
and Amy Thompson, president of Associated Women Students,
who will lead campus activities this fall. Both Ricca and Thompson
have started on programs which should assure the college a busy year.
New Attendance
Rules In Effect
Here This Quarter
No Excuse For Illness Of Less
Than Two Days Will
Be Allowed
New rules in attendance for stu­dents
and faculty will be enforced
here this fall, it was learned here
at registration last week.
The most important change, at
least from the student point of
view, is that no excuses for illness
will be allowed for less than two
days. If a student wishes to be
sick for one day, it will be on his
own responsibility, whereas, for­merly
an excuse was allowed for
one day.
A new ruling provides that a
student’s absence from classes for
more than five consecutive days
must be reported to the registrar's
office. The optional giving of
“double cuts" before and after va­cation
periods is a change in the
opposite direction. The previous
practice was for such cuts to be
automatically imposed for ab­sences
immediately before or after
vacations.
Faculty members are restricted
by the vacation ruling, also. They
are expected to atteqd classes im­mediately
before and after vaca­tions,
as well as students. In­structors
are required to report to
the administration if they wish to
be absent from any classes for any
reason, and are expected to provide
for class work during such ab­sences.
Teachers are also required
to call roll at each class, follow
class schedules, and may not give
examinations * at other than the
scheduled periods.
C arlotta W oodburn
M akes B est M ark
In E nglish Exam
Three of the five highest grades
in the English examination given
to all freshmen and transfers last
week were made by students c<
ing from high schools employing
Flagstaff graduates as English
teachers, it was revealed by Dr.
Mary A. Hill, head of the English
department here. The highest
mark was 227, made by Carlotta
Woodburn, Flagstaff. The maxi­mum
was 270. The others were
Margaret Temme, Jerome, 226;
Pauline Sandholt, Monterey, Calif-,
215; Callie Hoovler, Flagstaff, 208,
and Laurel Peterson, Flagstaff,
203. The number of students tak­ing
the test exceeded previous
^ears, and the median was the
iighest since 1931, Dr. Hill said.
The rise i n t h e median was at­tributed
by DrT'Hill to better Eng­lish
teaching in high schools, al­though
“the proof lies in the fur
ture, she said.
B jerg P roves H andy
Man D uring O uting
W ith P air Of P an ts
H. 0. Bjerg of the Arizona State
Teachers college industrial arts de­partment
demonstrated his re­sourcefulness
when his automobile
became stuck in the sand in a re­mote
section of the Navajo reser­vation.
Bjerg said there was not a sign
of brush to place under the car’s
wheels to gam traction.
So, he related, he doffed his
trousers, placed them under a rear
wheel and extricated the car.—Hol­brook
Tribune.
Bushy Growth To Decide Homecoming King
At a regular meeting of the Stu­dent
Council last night in the Stu­dent
Council office, the student
representatives voted unanimously
to support a whiskerino to be
started immediately until Home­coming,
October 24.
All students, faculty members,
Townjacks, and citizens of Flag­staff
are urged to stop shaving un­til
after the game with Tempe on
Skidmore field, on Hanley day.
Campaigns will be started immedi­ately
to enforce the ruling, and to
win the Flagstaff residents over to
the idea. That something of this
type can be done is proved every
year at the Indian Pow Wow. All
people of the immediate vicinity
seem pleased to have an opportun­ity
to “play Injun,” and it is hoped
that everyone will appreciate the
opportunity to play Lumberjack.
Sam Illitzky, college yell leader,
was appointed by the Student
Council to take charge of the whis­kerino,
and he will start a -pub­licity
program in the very near fu­ture.
Sam will appoint several
assistants to work with him in
iromoting the fete to help in mak-ng
Hanley day the greatest of all
Homecomings. “If things work
out as well as they seem on the
surface," said Illitzky, “we will of­fer
a large variety of prizes—one
for the best beard, one for the
worst beard, and several for those
in between.”
Sid Knudsen, editor of the Pine,
announced that a committee of
downtown barbers would select the
King of Homecoming from all the
contestants. The barbers will be
asked to show no favoritism, but
to select the winner fromN*'among I An appropriation of $45
those men with the longest, the made by the Student Council with
iggest and the toughest whiskers,
fhen interviewed by one of his re­porters,
Knudsen said, “We want
to make this the biggest and the
best whiskerino ever held in Flag-staff,
and from what they tell me,
they used to have some mighty
good ones here in the old days.”
The Pine has always selected the
Homecoming King and Queen in
the past, and will have charge of
doing so this year.
The Student Council, realizing
that student teachers and a few
other male student* on the cam­pus
would find themselves in a
position where they could not go
without 8having, proclaimed that
a few exceptions will be granted.
The legal exceptions will be listed,
in next week's Pine.
which sweaters are to be purchased
for the Pep squad. Bnx Moore,
student body secretary, and mem­ber
of the Pep squad suggested
that the uniform of the Pep squad
be slacks and sweaters, and the
council agreed to pay for one-half
of the total expenditures on the
Pep squad uniforms, not to exceed
the $45 allotted. Sweaters were
also *>ted for the yell leader and
assistant yell leader.
Heated arguments were heard
when th‘ e Student Council discussed
plans for an annual, the La Cuesta.
which, it is hoped will be printed
thia year. However, the discus­sions
were shelved until the next
Student Council meeting, at which
new material will be presented for
discussion.
ADD FOUR NEW
M EM B E R S TO
FACULTY LIST
C a l d w e l l Johnson Replaces
Alfred Anderson Who
Is On Leave
' With the opening of school last
week, four new faculty membere
made their appearance at the col­lege
here. Arden B. Olsen is new
head of the business education de­partment,
replacing D. B. Harmon;
Caldwell Johnson replaces Alfred
Anderson who is now on leave of
labsunce from the music depart­ment;
Garret Arbelbide is new
football coach, replacing Mark
Macintosh, and James G. Johnson
‘ is new publicity director and in­structor
in English and journalism,
i Dr. Olsen received his B.S. and
M.S. degrees from the University
of Utah, and his Ph.D. from the
University of California. He has
taught at several colleges inelud
ing Utah State Agricultural col­lege
and the University of Cali­fornia.
Caldwell Johnson received
his B.A. degree from Iowa Univer­sity
and his M.A. from Columbia.
Arbelbide was graduated from
the University of Southern Califor­nia
where he played football under
Howard Jones. He has both the
B.A. and M.A. degrees from there
He has coached at Modesto and La
Verne colleges in California. James
Johnson received his B.A. at the
University of Minnesota with fur­ther
work at Amherst college, Uni­versity
of Geneva and Kansas
State college. He has taught at
Park college, Kansas State college,
Texas A. and M. college, and comes
to Flagstaff from the college of
Emporia, Kans.
Pi K a p p a E psilon
To Honor V isitin g
C a l i f . G rid Team
Honoring the visiting Polytech­nic
college football team of San
Louis Obispo, Pi Kappa Epsilon,
local De Molay fraternity, will hold
their annual football dance in As­hurst
auditorium next Saturday
night-
"We have planned to have the
auditorium decorated, refreshments
served, and a well filled program
and good music,” Harry Biller
president of the organization, tola
the Pine this week. As has been
the custom of the organisation in
the past, the members of the club
will hold interpolation, at which
time the Pi Kappa ritual for the
event will be gone through.
Committees for the supervision
of the dance are: Decorations, Tom
Tucker, Sid Knudsen, Paul Her­rera;
refreshments, John Herrera;
music, James Williams. Interpola­tion
will be given by John Herrera
and Tom Tucker.
Smallest S e n i o r Year Class
In Years Seen With
37 Sighed
Men Dominate
F i n a l Count Reveals Males
Outnumber Females By
Good Margin
With only a few stragglers left
to report registration had swelled
from 368 last Thursday to nearly
400 students, records from the reg­istrar’s
office revealed today. Ap­proximately
170 freshmen, one of
the largest classes in recent years,
brings the enrollment up close to
the figure set last year. \
Contrary to the general rule in
teachers colleges, men students
outnumber the women by 16 per
cent, as records show that 37 more
males havesigned up than females.
It is thoughf'that Flagstaff is one
of the few teachers cbl leges in the
oeuntry which can hoaat such a
record.
This year out-of-state registra­tion
is up 17 per cent over last year
with 65 students giving out-of-state
addresses. Of this number,
California takes the lead with 20,
Illinois is second with 12, Texas
third with 6. New York, Indiana
and New Mexico claim four each;
Kansas and Missouri, three for
each state; Utah *uid Michigan
claim two, while Oklahoma, Wis­consin,
Georgia, Iowa, Colorado
and Louisiana have registered one
from each state.
In Arizona, Coconino county
leads all others by a large margin,
placing 61 students from seven
towns. Gila county placed second
with 38. The enrollment from the
other counties was: Maricopa, S3;
Cochise, 32; Navajo, 31; Yavapai,
31; Apache, 23; Yuma, 14; Pinal,
11; Mojave, 10; Greenlee, 10; Gra­ham,
7, and Pima, 3.
In the upper class division two
of the smallest classes in recent
N ew C ollege Inn To
Open H om ecom ing
A new College Inn twice as large
as the old one with a large fireplace
and ample room for dancing will
be finished in time for Homecom-
“Pat” Patterson, proprietor,
_ the Pine this morning.
The same policy of service to the
students as has been used in the
past will be carried on, Pat also
stated. The reason for the new
Inn is that the old one is getting
too small for the college.
ing, 1
tola tl
years are evidenced with only ap­proximately
37 seniors and 66 jun­iors
signed up. The apparent rea­son
for the small number of seniors
registered is that a large group
graduated at the end of summer
school to escape from the new
teacher requirements going into ef­fect
this falL
The reason for the junior mor­tality
is probably because with the
return of bettet'Times many of the
students have returned to work.
Sophomore registration, however,
totaled 104, a very slight drop from
last year’s freshman class.
U. S. Senator C arl
H ayden To S p e a k
A t C o u r t H o u s e
United States Senator Carl Hay­den
will speak at the county court­house
tomorrow night at 8 p. m.
under the auspices of the Young
Democratic club of Arizona, Pat
Patterson, local president of the
club which has charge of the meet­ing,
told the Pine last week.
The theme of his address will be
the Roosevelt program and the
New Deal. He will explain many
of the features and will answer all
questions regarding the adminis­tration’s
work.
Carl Hayden is serving as sena-
_jr from Arizona in his second
term; he doe* not com* up for re-election
for another four years.
Prior to this time he acted at rep­resentative
for a number of years.